PlayOn
04-03-2008, 07:27 PM
from www.yahoo.com
ALLEGAN, Mich.- is 5th grader Kenton Stuffelbeam smarter than the Smithsonian?
On a winter break trip with his family to the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of History, the 11-year-old southwestern Michigan boy noticed that a notation, in bold lettering, mistakingly identified the Precambrian as an era.
Since it opened it 1981, millions of people have paraded past the museums Tower of Time, a display involving prehisortic time. Kenton was the first to pint out the error.
Kenton, who lives in Allegan, Michigan and attends Alamo Elementary School near Kalamazoo, said his 5th grade teacher, John Chapman, made he same mistake Precambrian in a classroom earth-science lesson beofre catching himself.
"I knew Mr. Chapman wouldn't tell all these student bad information,"
ALLEGAN, Mich.- is 5th grader Kenton Stuffelbeam smarter than the Smithsonian?
On a winter break trip with his family to the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of History, the 11-year-old southwestern Michigan boy noticed that a notation, in bold lettering, mistakingly identified the Precambrian as an era.
Since it opened it 1981, millions of people have paraded past the museums Tower of Time, a display involving prehisortic time. Kenton was the first to pint out the error.
Kenton, who lives in Allegan, Michigan and attends Alamo Elementary School near Kalamazoo, said his 5th grade teacher, John Chapman, made he same mistake Precambrian in a classroom earth-science lesson beofre catching himself.
"I knew Mr. Chapman wouldn't tell all these student bad information,"